State v. Mitchell
State v. Mitchell
Opinion of the Court
This was a motion before the Court of Sessions, for a mandamus to be directed to the defendant, to grant letters of administration to Mary Johnston, daughter of Susannah Johnston, deceased, and to William Clement, guardian of three minor grandchildren of the intestate.
On hearing the case, it appeared that the defendant had granted letters of administration on the said estate to Esther Greenland, the daughter of the intestate, and Samuel A. Greenland, her husband, before this application had been made to the Court of Sessions ; and pending that question before the ordinary, the present applicants were heard in full argument, two or three times before the ordinary decided. I shall keep out of view every other point but that which relates to the mandamus.
It is not essential here, that I should say to whom the ordinary ought to have granted administration : it is enough for the decision of this question, that he did grant it to some person; and having granted it, I am clearly of opinion, that the legal mode to try the validity of that grant, is not by mandamus. By the 12th section
I am of opinion, that the ordinary, by the 16th clause of our executor’s law of 1789, has a discretionary power to grant the administration to whom he thinks proper, among those of equal degree of relationship to the deceased : or he may join them, if he thinks proper. The words of the act are these : that the county court, or ordinary of the district, as the case may be, having, the right, shall grant administration of the deceased to his or her relations, in the following order, in exclusion of all others, to wit: L To the husband, or wife of the deceased ; or if there be none, to the child, or children of the deceased, or their legal representatives ; in default of them, to the brothers and sisters, &c., &c. Here, then, a discretionary power is evidently given to the ordinary, to grant to such child, or children, or their representatives, as he may think most fit and capable of managing the affairs of the deceased’s estate; and it is fit and proper in the nature of things, that such discretionary power should be given to a public officer, in the execution of his duty, in performance of so high a trust; because some of the children, or their representatives, may not be trust worthy, or may be idle, dissolute, extravagant persons, while others may be
2. With regard to the present application for a mandamus, I am of opinion, that this court ought not to grant it, because there is an appeal allowed by the act of 1799, to the Court of Common Pleas, and the party might have appealed. The ordinary acts partly in a judicial, partly in a ministerial capacity. In the case under consideration, he acted judicially, in determining who was the proper person who was intitled, under the existing circumstances, to the administration ; and it is a well known rule in law, that a mandamus will not lie against a judicial officer, nor against one who has a discretionary power, 3 Dallas, 48 ; nor will it lie to a spiritual court, to grant administration to one as next of kin, after an administration is granted to another. 5 Com. Dig. 28. Comyn’s Rep. 96. This last authority is strongly in point, and comes completely up to the case under consideration. I am, therefore, against the mandamus.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- State v. James D. Mitchell, Ordinary
- Status
- Published